Frogs & Stitching — What Do You Do?

Sometimes I think I rip stitches out (frog stitching) far more than I used to. Probably it has to do with age; I just don’t see as well.

But, no matter the reason, we all find ourselves ripping out stitches, sometimes a little, sometimes a lot.

There are lots of techniques for pulling out stitches, some better than others. Earlier this week Joni Stevenson had a great post. about ripping out. It has some wonderful advice.

I find I rip out in one of two ways. I will pull from the front or from front and back, but only for a very few stitches. This isn’t for laudable reasons, but because I hate pulling long threads. Mostly, I cut and pull out.

When you do this you cannot reuse the thread, and it’s slow, but it does work.

Here’s how. Start to work on the back of the canvas. Have at hand:

sort, sharp scissors with thin blades

needle one size bigger than the one you’d use for stitching

tweezers

Begin by cutting as many threads on the back as you can see easily. Usually these are the ones in the last row and at the ends of rows. You may find some stitches you can cut in the middle too, but don’t worry if you can’t.

Rub over this area hard with your finger to bring up the ends. Pull them with tweezers to get out what can easily be pulled (this might not be much).

Flip the canvas over and use your needle to pull out from the front a few stitches at the holes you’ve created by what you did on the back.

With you scissors trim off all the threads that stick up. This is a very important step because it gets threads out of the way so you can see more threads to cut.

With your neatened back, repeat the whole process again and continue in this way until the area is ripped out.

Using this process you get lots of fluff. I throw it out. The process is easier with single strand threads, because often you don’t cut or pull all the strands of a plied thread.

If there is fluff at the end of the process sticking on your canvas, use a clean spoolie to remove them by pushing the spoolie through the canvas.

It’s slow but don’t be discouraged, progress is being made. I put on a movie or listen to something while I’m doing this.

The thing I love about this method is that it works for any thread and any stitch. I’ve used it on everything from soft fluffy threads to velour and stitches from tight Basketweave to textured stitches.

It also does a great job of getting out the frustrations. So I’m usually relaxed when it’s done and delighted to get back to stitching.

Read the #1 Needlepoint blog!

More Great Articles

Updated December 18, 2018 plus new additional info at end of post I get lots of mail about saving money when stitching needlepoint. I think making good use of the investment you make in stitching is important, whether you are making a stash project with a canvas you bought on eBay or stitching a canvas […]